Mass sexual attack in Germany inflames migrant debate
German authorities said on Tuesday that coordinated attacks in which
young women were sexually harassed and robbed by hundreds of young men
on New Year’s Eve in the western city of Cologne were unprecedented in
scale and nature.
The police in Hamburg also said that 10 women had reported being sexually assaulted and robbed in a similar fashion on the same night, and they urged witnesses to come forward.
The assault, which went largely unreported for days, set off a national
outcry after the Cologne police described the attackers as young men
“who appeared to have a North African or Arabic” background, based on
testimony from victims and witnesses. More than 90 people have filed
legal complaints, the police said on Tuesday.
The police in Hamburg also said that 10 women had reported being sexually assaulted and robbed in a similar fashion on the same night, and they urged witnesses to come forward.
Germany took in more than one million migrants last year, and with the
country struggling to deal with the political, social and wider
consequences of the influx, the delayed public response has led to
concerns that the authorities were playing down the seriousness of the
assault to prevent it from becoming a point of contention in the broader
debate.
The assault took place late on Thursday on the vast public square in
front of the city’s main train station, a central transit point for
anyone coming or going from a fireworks display over the Rhine and the
bars and nightclubs in the heart of the city, in the shadow of its
landmark cathedral.
Heiko Maas, Germany’s justice minister, warned on Tuesday against
linking the assaults to the influx of refugees, saying that the
ethnicity of the perpetrators was irrelevant.
“The rule of the law does not look at where someone comes from but what they did,” Mr. Maas told reporters in Berlin. “We will investigate what circles the perpetrators may have come from.”
The Cologne police say they believe several hundred men, ages 15 to 35,
were involved in the violence that began in the early hours of the New
Year, after the square was cleared because men had been throwing
firecrackers into the crowd.
Wolfgang Albers, Cologne’s chief of police, said the assaults had taken
place in the chaos that followed, as the square was emptied. The men
appeared to have broken into smaller groups, the police said, with each
one encircling a woman; while some would grope the victim, others would
steal her wallet or cellphone.
One victim reported that she had been raped, the police said.
Henriette Reker, Cologne’s mayor, called a crisis meeting on Tuesday to
address the issue. Ms. Reker, who was stabbed during a campaign event in
October by an attacker who opposed her welcoming attitude toward
migrants, called the assault “absolutely intolerable” and pledged her
support for the authorities’ investigation.
The city holds a large festival every year before Easter, when thousands
of costumed revelers throng the streets to celebrate with parades and
parties, and Ms. Reker echoed the concerns of many about safety during
the Carnival season.
In an effort to prevent further violence, Ms. Reker said that city
officials would begin working on measures to help young women protect
themselves and to explain the city’s attitudes and norms to its many
newcomers.
“We will explain our Carnival much better to people who come from other cultures,” she said, “so there won’t be any confusion about what constitutes celebratory behavior in Cologne, which has nothing to do with a sexual frankness.”
Cologne, with roughly one million inhabitants, is among Germany’s most
ethnically diverse cities, and it took in more than 10,000 refugees last
year, many of them young men from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. The city
authorities said they would increase security after the assaults, as
they continued to search for suspects.
The euphoria that accompanied the first wave of arrivals in Germany this
summer has since given way to growing unease about the difficulty of
integrating hundreds of thousands of people of a different religion and
who were raised in a different culture.
Far-right and anti-immigrant groups in Germany, and others who oppose
the influx, swiftly seized on the episode, saying it demonstrated the
dangers associated with accepting huge numbers of migrants.
Lutz Bachmann, head of the anti-immigrant Pegida movement, accused
German leaders on Twitter of complicity in the assault. In a post that
named Ms. Merkel; her deputy, Sigmar Gabriel; and other politicians, Mr.
Bachmann said, “You are all responsible for the abuse in Cologne!”
Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose unmitigated support for a migrant flow
that has increasingly put her country under strain and caused political
rifts in her own conservative bloc, used an annual event on Tuesday to
call for mutual respect.
“We are all of the understanding that we respect everyone, even those
who we don’t know,” the chancellor said in Berlin, where she greeted
groups of children who celebrated the Epiphany by dressing up as three
kings and collecting donations for charity or their churches.
The chancellor recalled that the country’s Constitution enshrines human
dignity as inviolable. “This is true not only for Germans, but for all
people,” she said.
The New York Times
Mass sexual attack in Germany inflames migrant debate
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